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Topic: Samuel Coleridge



  
 SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE - LoveToKnow Article on SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
But after his stay at Malta, Coleridge announced to his friends that he had given up his Socinianism (of which ever afterwards he spoke with asperity), professing a return to Christian faith, though still putting on it a mystical construction, as when he told Crabb Robinson that Jesus Christ was a Platonic philosopher.
The book contained much invective against Pitt, and in after life Coleridge declared that, with this exception, and a few pages involving philosophical tenets which he afterwards rejected, there was little or nothing he desired to retract.
Coleridge was anxious to embody a dream of a friend, and the suggestion of the shooting of the albatross came from Wordsworth, who gained the idea from Shelvockes Voyage (1726).
http://11.1911encyclopedia.org/C/CO/COLERIDGE_SAMUEL_TAYLOR.htm   (3918 words)

  
 Literary Encyclopedia: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born on 21 October 1772, the youngest of ten children, in Ottery St. Mary in Devon.
Coleridge would often tell the story of his army experiences as a comic tale of incompetence and recalcitrant horses, but he spent time in the sickhouse nursing victims of smallpox, so it was really much more than a lark.
The Coleridges finally decided to separate, and, apparently buoyed, Coleridge and Hartley joined the Wordsworths, who were living at Coleorton, on the Leicestershire estate of Wordsworth& patron Sir George Beaumont: here, in early 1807, Coleridge heard Wordsworth recite The Prelude (the ‘Poem to Coleridge’), and wrote his answering poem (‘To William Wordsworth&;).
http://www.literaryencyclopedia.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=949   (2696 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was a British Romantic poet and philosopher who had incalculable impact in shaping American Transcendentalism.
The name of Coleridge was spoken with profound reverence, his books were studied industriously, and the terminology of transcendentalism was as familiar as commonplace in the circles of divines and men of letters.
Amos Bronson Alcott found the antidote to Lockean psychology in his readings of Coleridge--that what was in the mind was God.
http://www.alcott.net/alcott/home/champions/Coleridge.html   (563 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Biography and Works
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in Ottery St Mary, Devonshire, as the youngest son of the vicar of Ottery St Mary.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Biographia Literaria The Biographia Literaria was one of Coleridge's main critical studies.
Posted By jtoland at Sun 18 Dec 2005, 11:50 PM in Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
http://www.online-literature.com/coleridge   (1240 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (October 21, 1772-July 25, 1834) was a poet, philosopher, and romantic visionary, an inescapable presence in early 19th-century England.
By the end of 1794 Coleridge was in London pondering his future; when Southey went in search of him he finally discovered him together with his friend Charles Lamb in a Unitarian chapel, seeking divine guidance.
Hartley had promoted the view of God as 'All in all', but Coleridge was also indebted to the earlier Cambridge Platonists, in whose writings he had immersed himself.
http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/samueltaylorcoleridge.html   (2463 words)

  
 A Biographical Sketch by blupete: Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834): "Wrecked in a Mist of Opium."
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was the youngest son of the Reverend John Coleridge, the vicar of Ottery St. Mary, a parish in the southern quarter of Devonshire.
A Biographical Sketch by blupete: Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834): "Wrecked in a Mist of Opium."
Coleridge was in love with Mary Evans but thought she was unresponsive.
http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Literary/Coleridge.htm   (12025 words)

  
 Victoria University Library--Coleridge Collection
The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Corrections and Additions to the Poetical Works.
Coleridge and Literary Society, 1790 - 1834: the Papers of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772- 1834) from the British Library, London.
It includes numerous citations to works written by and about S.T. Coleridge and his contemporaries, including monographs and articles published from the late 18th to the early 20th centuries, and Coleridge's work in different editions published under the editorship of various individuals.
http://library.vicu.utoronto.ca/special/colepic.htm   (693 words)

  
 Coleridge, Samuel Taylor - Columbia Encyclopedia article about Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 1772–1834, English poet and man of letters, b.
Coleridge's main contribution to the volume was the haunting, dreamlike ballad "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." This long poem, as well as "Kubla Khan" and "Christabel," written during the same period, are Coleridge's best-known works.
The son of a clergyman, Coleridge was a precocious, dreamy child.
http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/Coleridge,+Samuel+Taylor   (931 words)

  
 The Academy of American Poets - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Literary Remains in Prose and Verse of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1839)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a leader of the British Romantic movement, was born on October 21, 1772, in Devonshire, England.
Specimens of the Table Talk of the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1835)
http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/292   (1009 words)

  
 Rare Device: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor was born on October 21st, 1772, youngest son of a large family sired by the Vicar of Ottery and master of the Grammar School, John Coleridge.
Sir Edmund Chambers said of him: 'So Coleridge passed, leaving a handful of golden poems, an emptiness in the heart of a few friends, and a will-o'-the-wisp light for bemused thinkers' [quoted in 152].
The Romanticism movement that Coleridge helped found was based on a rejection of the scientific ideals of its age, but nonetheless the work of the poet, and Coleridge in particular, is an exacting process in itself.
http://www.tabula-rasa.info/DarkAges/RareDevice.html   (806 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge --  Encyclopædia Britannica
In The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, probably the most famous poem by English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the title character detains a young man on his way to a wedding feast and mesmerizes him with the story of his youthful experience at sea.
English translator and author of children's verse, known primarily as the editor of the works of her father, Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
The wayward talent of English writer Hartley Coleridge, eldest son of poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, found expression in skillful and sensitive sonnets.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9024735   (614 words)

  
 SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
In a film that imagines the friendship of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth as a series of feverish hallucinations, this is a useful orientation: Pandaemonium is less a BBC costume drama than an attempt to recreate the hazy fog of an opium dream." By Gary Mairs at CultureVulture.
An introduction to Samuel Taylor Coleridge by professor Seamus Perry, from the Literary Encyclopedia.
A review of "The Norton Critical Edition of Coleridge's Poetry and Prose," a new edition aimed at students, intended to be a reliably edited, inexpensive, and thoroughly annotated selection of his poetry and prose.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/19thC/COLERIDGE.htm   (1503 words)

  
 The Literary Gothic Samuel Taylor Coleridge
A literary society which "aims to foster interest in the life and works of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his circle, and to support Coleridge Cottage." Includes links to STC resources as well as articles and STC-related news.
"Eclipsed by the Pleasure Dome: Poetic Failure in Coleridge's 'Kubla Khan'"
STC could struggle with despair and a sort of proto-existentialist gloom like no other Romantic poet (though John Clare comes close), and in these works Coleridge gives us dark glimpses into Romantic understandings of the mind and the emotions, a process begun by the Gothic.
http://www.litgothic.com/Authors/stc.html   (701 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834), English poet, critic, and philosopher, who was a leader of the romantic movement (see Romanticism).
Coleridge studied German and translated into English the dramatic trilogy Wallenstein by the romantic poet Friedrich von Schiller.
In the fall of 1798 Coleridge and Wordsworth left for a trip on the European continent.
http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.aspx?refid=761563578   (689 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes - The Quotations Page
- Read the works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge online at The Literature Page
Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes - The Quotations Page
- Search for Samuel Taylor Coleridge at Amazon.com
http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge   (278 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Boyd's Dante, Coleridge's 'Ancient Mariner,' and the pattern of infernal influence.(Reverend Henry Boyd; Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 1772–1834, English poet and man of letters, b.
The marriage of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Jessie Walmisley.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0812851.html   (252 words)

  
 Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
William Tortolano in his book Samuel Coleridge-Taylor; Anglo-Black Composer, 1875-1912 (Metuchen, NJ, Scarecrow, 1977) states:
In the foreword to the 1969 edition of Sayers', Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Musician, His Life and Letters, Blydon Jackson writes:
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was born on August 15, 1875 in Holborn, England (a suburb of London).
http://cambridgechorus.org/docs/comps/SC-Taylor.html   (1060 words)

  
 Gale - Free Resources - Poet's Corner - Biographies - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Gale - Free Resources - Poet's Corner - Biographies - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Inspired by the initial events of the French Revolution, Coleridge and Southey collaborated on The Fall of Robespierre: An Historic Drama (1794).
In the last years of his life Coleridge wrote political and philosophical works, and his Biographia Literaria, considered his greatest critical writing, in which he developed artistic theories that were intended to be the introduction to a great philosophical work.
http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/poets/bio/coleridge_s.htm   (713 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the youngest son of the vicar of Ottery St Mary, Devon, was born in 1772.
Samuel and Sarah Coleridge moved to Bristol where he lectured at Unitarian chapels and wrote over fifty articles for the Morning Chronicle that gave him the opportunity to explain the ideas of Joseph Priestley and William Godwin to a large audience.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge died of a heart attack in 1834.
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Jcoleridge.htm   (387 words)

  
 Samuel Coleridge-Taylor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This page is about the twentieth century composer; for the nineteenth century poet, see Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (August 15, 1875 – September 1, 1912), was an English composer, born in Croydon to a Sierra Leonean father and English mother.
Coleridge-Taylor was greatly admired by African-Americans; in 1901, a 200-voice African-American chorus was founded in Washington, D.C. called the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Society.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Coleridge-Taylor   (398 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
"Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in 1772 in Ottery St. Mary as the final child of fourteen.
The marriage was doomed to not work, and Coleridge finally separated from his wife in 1806.
Coleridge was a source for great poetry of the Romantic age of literature.
http://www.etsu.edu/english/3134/zwsg1/coleridge/coleridge/col.htm   (543 words)

  
 Chesil's Favourite Poetry -Coleridge
The Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The relationship with Wordsworth became strained in the early nineteenth century and Coleridge really never again reached the early heights in his poetics.
Born the son of a vicar in 1772 in Ottery St Mary, Devon, England, Coleridge was the youngest of a large family and had an unhappy childhood.
http://www.photoaspects.com/chesil/coleridge   (231 words)

  
 Coleridge-Taylor
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was born in London in 1875, the son of a Sierra Leonean doctor and and English mother.
Apparently feeling that his career as a surgeon was blocked because he was black, his father returned to Africa, abandoning Samuel and his mother in England.
At the age of fifteen, Coleridge Taylor entered the Royal College of Music to study the violin and he also studied composition with Stanford.
http://www.yso.org.uk/biographies/coleridgetaylor.html   (145 words)

  
 The Friends of Coleridge
, founded in 1986 by David Miall and Rosemary Cawthray, aims to foster interest in the life and works of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his circle, and to support
Our members all share an interest in or admiration for Samuel Taylor Coleridge - these include those engaged with his local associations in Somerset and international scholars.
at Cannington, close to the Quantock Hills, which inspired some of Coleridge's greatest poetry.
http://www.friendsofcoleridge.com   (207 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Kubla Khan
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Kubla Khan or, a Vision In a Dream: A Fragment (1816)
Coleridge was responsible for attempting to present the supernatural as real whereas his friend William Wordsworth would try to render ordinary reality as remarkable, strange.
He suffered great physical and emotional pain during his life and became addicted to opium.
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/coleridge.html   (524 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Coleridge's poem "Kubla Khan" is available on-line at.
Coleridge's poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is available in several pages, including
A good site to start at is the
http://users.lycaeum.org/~sputnik/People/coleridg.html   (40 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge @Web English Teacher
The original source of these questions is Richard Matlak's Approaches to Teaching Coleridge's Poetry and Prose.
Screening Coleridge's Fantasies: Using Popular Music as a Bridge to Literary Intepretation and Criticism
Scroll to lesson 69 from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
http://www.webenglishteacher.com/coleridge.html   (216 words)

  
 Poetry: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) was born in a small village in southern England, but after the death of his father he was sent to school in London.
The Literature Network presents a lengthy biography of Coleridge and links to the text of a selection of his poems.
Coleridge by this time was addicted to opium, and his writing became chaotically uneven.
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/poetry/coleridge.htm   (401 words)

  
 Samuel Taylor Coleridge Biography
As near as I can tell, no one but his wife ever called him Samuel; he was usually Coleridge or Col, and definitely NEVER Sam.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in Ottery St. Mary on 21 October 1772, youngest of the ten children of John Coleridge, a minister, and Ann Bowden Coleridge.
John Coleridge died in 1781, and Col was sent away to a London charity school for children of the clergy.
http://www.incompetech.com/authors/coleridge   (1566 words)

  
 Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Afro-British Composer & Conductor
African Romances: The Life and Music of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912).
The British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was born on August 15, 1875 in Croydon, a suburb of London, England.
Ballade is the title of a CD of works by Edvard Grieg, Claude Debussy and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, on EDI Records 9259 (2005).
http://chevalierdesaintgeorges.homestead.com/Song.html   (2140 words)

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